A4, quiet quitting, wet lettuce: The phrases that define 2022
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
(Clockwise from top left) The death of Queen Elizabeth II, COP27's loss and damage fund, Twitter's blue tick and the Covid-19 protests in China were among the significant events of 2022.
PHOTOS: AFP, ST FILE, EPA-EFE, REUTERS
Follow topic:
PARIS - A year of extraordinary upheaval, from the war in Ukraine to catastrophic natural disasters. Here’s a look at some of the words and phrases that have defined 2022.
A4
Protests erupted in China, initially over Covid-19 restrictions but later widening to broader political grievances, posing the greatest threat to the Beijing authorities since 1989. The demonstrations became known in some quarters as the “A4“ protests as protesters held up blank A4-sized sheets of white paper
Armageddon
With the war in Ukraine and increasingly strident threats from Russian President Vladimir Putin, the spectre of nuclear warfare is stalking the globe for the first time in decades. “We have not faced the prospect of Armageddon since Kennedy and the Cuban missile crisis” in 1962, US President Joe Biden warned in October. bracing for a first nuclear test
London Bridge
At 6.30pm on September 8, Buckingham Palace announced that Queen Elizabeth had died,
Loss and Damage
World leaders and negotiators descended on the Egyptian Red Sea port of Sharm el-Sheikh for the latest United Nations summit (COP27) on tackling climate change. After a fractious summit, widely seen as poorly organised, a deal was clinched on a fund for “loss and damage”
Woman. Life. Freedom
The chant screamed by protesters in Iran following the death of Ms Mahsa Amini,
Blue tick
The tiny blue tick (it’s actually white on a blue background), which certifies users on Twitter, became a symbol of the chaos engulfing the social media platform in the wake of its takeover by Mr Elon Musk. The mercurial Tesla boss announced that anyone wanting the coveted blue tick would have to stump up eight dollars,
Roe v. Wade
In an historic ruling, the conservative-dominated US Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 “Roe v. Wade” decision
Quiet quitting
One of the “words of the year” in Britain and Australia, the phrase refers to doing the bare minimum at work,
Wet lettuce
As Ms Liz Truss approached the end of her chaotic and short-lived tenure as British prime minister, the Economist weekly mused that her effective period in office had been “roughly the shelf-life of a lettuce”. The tabloid Daily Star leapt on the idea, launching a live web cam featuring said vegetable
Tomato soup
Environmental protesters seeking to draw attention to the role of fossil fuel consumption in the climate crisis hurled tomato soup at Vincent Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” painting

